I am 100% percent sending messages to my pancreas to get itself going again. I feel great for the guy and he genuinely seems to be wanting to help research to get us all fixed. I like running most if the time (not ultra marathon) and I've done some pretty harsh spinning classes. I hope it's true hope it can help us and hope it lasts for him!
I wonder if he was just misdiagnosed?
He says in this one - https://asweetlife.org/has-a-british-man-really-been-cured-of-type-1-diabetes/ - that he was diagnosed type 1 in 2011 with tests confirming no cpeptide and antibody positive. So simple misdiagnosis seems unlikely.
I have replied below, this is what happens to me, will try not having insulin or lower the dose to start.I occasionally have what we call in our household like to call "Pancreas Parties" - when for no discernable reason my pancreas "appears" to start working! In that: I have a hypo after insulin, stop taking insulin (for up to two days!) and my blood sugars remain static and 'in range' (5.4-6.5).
Background: I am only three years into being diagnosed as Type 1 and have been on a pretty standard bolus/basal injection routine. In those three years, I have had maybe 7 or 8 'Pancreas Parties'.
I must note I have never stopped taking my overnight insulin when this happens, but I can eat normally without injecting and my body "appears" to process the glucose - certainly, my blood sugars remain unaffected, and if I do then take insulin I have a hypo.
Whilst there could be any number of reasons for this, it does seem to 'just happen' and is unrelated to anything else - Trust me, my monitoring can border on obsessive (well, since this first happened!) - I always record activity, Carbs, Insulin, the weather so I am getting a pretty wide range of data to compare and analyse.
Just thought I'd throw my experience of 'disappearing diabetes' into the ring!
I'm almost certain of that Azure. Even 29 years in, there are (rare) occasions where what should be a correct amount of insulin is way too much.
I'm almost certain of that Azure. Even 29 years in, there are (rare) occasions where what should be a correct amount of insulin is way too much.
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